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SOCAP in Europe conference

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How British businesses throw away money by alienating consumers ... I think just about everyone in the world hates call centres and this automated drivel. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: SOCAP in Europe conference


1
The Stupid Company How British businesses throw
away money by alienating consumers
SOCAP in Europe conference London, 2 October
2006 Philip Cullum
2
The case for customer satisfaction
Satisfied Starbucks customers spend 3,000,
dissatisfied ones spend 200
Lifetime value of a satisfied BMW customer is
143,500
3
Service rage
  • Two-thirds of UK consumers think customer service
    has not improved in the last five years
  • Top of mind issues and sectors
  • Call centres, extended warranties, missed
    appointments, poor after-sales service, cold
    calling, automated services or being put on hold
  • Financial services, telecoms, electrical
    retailers, garages

4
Active consumers
  • Consumer switching levels have risen by 52 since
    2000
  • If 100 people have a bad experience, a retailer
    stands to lose between 32 and 36 current or
    potential customers
  • We read about this young couple who had changed
    their mortgage provider. It made us realise we
    werent bound to the same provider forever.
  • As far as I was concerned, the company I was
    with couldnt provide a reliable broadband
    service, so I went elsewhere.
  • If you have experience of a good company you
    pass it on if you have experience of a bad
    company, you make people aware.

5
The consequences consumer revenge
  • Average company life expectancy is 12.5 years
  • Just 21 years after the establishment of the FTSE
    100 share index, two-thirds of the original 100
    companies had fallen off the list.
  • Chief executives on average stay in post for no
    more than about four years.
  •  
  • The average tenure for chief marketing officers
    is 22.9 months.

6
Feeling what its like to be a customer
  • Most people say theyd be happy to help companies
    improve if they thought anyone was listening, but
    that most of the time its easier to simply walk
    away.
  • 70 per cent of consumers tell us that company
    bosses are out of touch, with no idea what its
    like to be a customer.
  • NCC research over two years with 5,000 consumers

7
5 ways companies get it wrong consumers views
  • Inflated expectations and broken promises
  • Sell sell sell
  • Sneaky and dishonest
  • Impersonal and robotic
  • Incompetent and ineffectual

8
1 Inflated expectations and broken promises
  • The Stupid Company over-promises and
    under-delivers
  • Hyping up products which fail to meet the promise
  • Advertising setting false expectations
  • Travel websites highlight the 1 bargains, and
    you go, you search for two hours and you then
    find its 60.

9
1 Inflated expectations and broken promises
(contd)
  • Selling a product, and then not having it in
    stock
  • They take your money out of your account and
    then, on the internet this is, maybe five days
    later you get an e-mail saying that its not in
    stock anymore. But youre expecting it through
    that day perhaps when you get the e-mail, you
    know, so youre excited.
  • Broken appointments
  • You have to wait in for half a day, and then
    its just almost like you dont matter. They
    dont turn up, or they dont even ring to say
    theyre not coming.

10
2 Sell sell sell
  • The Stupid Company is obsessive about making a
    sale.
  • All about the sale, with poor after care -
    especially electrical retailers
  • Offering you the world when youre a potential
    customer and then treating you like crap when
    youre an existing customer.
  • Trying to sell you more when you get in touch -
    especially financial services and mobile phones
  • Theyre not happy with just the one product,
    they want to go into every single product under
    the sun.

11
2 Sell sell sell (contd)
  • Aggressive marketing intrusive and pushy
  • Theyre constantly ringing you up, hassling you
    to buy this particular product, and theyre
    constantly sending you mail when you dont want
    it, even when youve asked.
  • Chasing potential new customers rather looking
    after existing ones introductory offers
  • If you go to a bank on lunchtime, and you want
    to pay something in, youre there with half of
    the world, and while youre standing in a queue,
    somebody is walking up and down, and looking at
    you, saying oh, Id better target you, do you
    want some of that? Do you want some of that?
  • Ignoring potential markets
  • Nut allergy sufferers, rail passengers,
    disadvantaged consumers

12
3 Sneaky and dishonest
  • The Stupid Company thinks it can succeed by
    misleading customers and being underhand and
    evasive.
  • Deliberate mis-selling
  • They dont explain the full price or options to
    you.
  • Hidden costs and small print
  • Theyre quick enough to write you letters saying
    only 19.99 or something a month and then at the
    very bottom when you read it all up youre paying
    an absolute fortune.
  • Dragging their feet
  • Insurance companies, with claims, they just
    delay and delay things.

13
3 Sneaky and dishonest (contd)
  • Passing the buck
  • When you ring them up to complain because youve
    got a thing thats faulty and they say, oh its
    not us, its the warranty company.
  • Junk mail
  • Putting things in envelopes, making it look like
    its more important than it is
  • Misleading advertising
  • First Trust - fees free

14
4 Impersonal and robotic
  • The Stupid Company appears distant from consumers
    and deals with them in a clinical manner.
  • Call centres/telephone systems
  • I think just about everyone in the world hates
    call centres and this automated drivel.
  • Helplines that take ages to actually get through
    in the first placeTheres select this number and
    dial one for this, and two for that. And then all
    you get is a recorded message at the end of it,
    going back to lack of human contact again.

15
4 Impersonal and robotic (contd)
  • Standardised letters
  • Treating me as a number Making me listen to
    recorded messages or hold music. And sending
    standard letters when I write an individual
    enquiry about something specific.
  • Employees script-based - disengaged, bored
  • They wont deviate from the script, and go and
    answer the questions that you put to them.

16
5 Incompetent and ineffectual
  • The Stupid Company is slow moving, patronising
    and apparently incapable of getting the most
    basic tasks right.
  • Confuse and patronise - especially electrical
    retailers, garages, financial services
  • They baffle you with science.
  • Not being treated like a human being, they make
    you angry as they make you feel slightly stupid
    because theyre talking to you like youre a
    child.
  • Inefficient and poor follow-through
  • Why write one letter when five to me will keep
    them even busier?
  • They expect you to take a whole day off work to
    have something delivered.

17
Getting smart the consumer agenda for action
  • Provide continuity and ownership
  • Show respect and honesty
  • Give the personal touch
  • Reward existing customers
  • Provide aftercare

18
1 Provide continuity and ownership
  • Ensure the same member of staff deals with an
    individual customer from start to finish
  • Get the employee to provide contact details so
    that it is easy to get directly in touch with him
    or her again.
  •  
  • The call centres, the person could give you
    their name and reference number for future
    calls.
  •  
  • Nice to have a stable workforce, nice to deal
    with the same people over X number of years
    rather than always finding theres somebody
    different because they left last week, and you
    wonder why. The same as its nice to have a
    workforce of varying ages and ethnic groups.

19
2 Show respect and honesty
  • Be straight about things like delivery times
  • Explain complex things simply
  •  
  • Be realistic with times and targets. Not
    telling you well yeah you can have it, it will be
    delivered on this day and then two weeks later
    its still not there.
  • Dont push them into a sale, let them make their
    own choice and give them help if they need it.
  • Deliver on their promises and commitments.
  • Talking to you like youre an adult.

20
3 Give the personal touch
  • Treat customers like individuals
  • Encourage staff to show initiative
  •  
  • Get rid of automated call handling systems and
    let me speak to a real person.
  • It puts a personal side to it, it makes you feel
    like youve got an arm round you, youre being
    looked after especially with technical stuff and
    complicated issues.
  • You like to feel that customer service is, that
    youre like the only person that they ever deal
    with, that youre special.
  • Sometimes if youre in a shop or something, just
    a simple hello or can I help you or something
    would do.

21
4 Reward existing customers
  • Provide incentives for customer loyalty
  •  
  • Acknowledge repeat business, so not this get
    them on board and then forget about them, which
    I think a lot of companies are guilty of.
  • Probably where Im most loyal is where I get the
    most feedbackCar companies and flight companies
    are always particularly good They send you mail
    regularly to remind you what a fantastic purchase
    you made and how wonderful you are, and if
    theres anything they can do for you, and dont
    forget youre part of this car club or this
    flight club It makes you feel as if youve been
    valued.

22
5 Provide aftercare
  • Dont forget about customers after theyve bought
    something instead check they are still happy.
  • Consumers can be remarkably forgiving if things
    are put right promptly. 
  • Follow up calls are always nice, it shows that
    theyre not just going to deal with it and forget
    about it, follow up, make sure youre happy,
    which some companies do, but not many, not nearly
    enough.
  • When you crash your car, a good insurance
    company will be phoning up to make sure youre
    okay, hows the car, hows it all going.

23
Getting it right
I love Asda basically because everything is
cheap and its reasonable prices, plus I get all
my daughters clothes from there and again
theyre reasonable and the staff are very happy
to help you as well, and its a really nice
supermarket If you cant find anything theres
always someone around on the shop floor to help.
Julie who cuts my hair has restyled it exactly
as I asked and remembers everything Ive told her
in conversation from one visit to the next (about
8 weeks) so that we pick up where we left off. A
different generation but I think of her as a
friend. London Transport just sent me a
letter asking for my email address so they could
send targeted communications about my regular
journeys which I think is a really good idea.
24
Treat your customer how you would like to be
treated if you were the customer.
p.cullum_at_ncc.org.uk www.ncc.org.uk
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